So while i ponder if this article is worth being created, i thought why most history textbooks didn't have the Jasenovac story. For dumb people, Jasenovac is the fourth largest death camp in WWII Europe but the worst and bloody of them all. Jews, Romas and others were killed but most of the victims are Serbs, who profess the Orthodox Faith and an obstacle to Vatican Supremacy. While in Poland, Catholics are the victims, in Croatia, it is the other way around. Croatian Roman Catholic priests were the suspects and making sure the Serbs either be killed or converted to Roman Catholicism, which is not on the Vatican law but somehow showing to the world that Vatican wants the blood of Orthodox Christians.
Heck, that's not all. The ratline word, of course. The Ratline are those of Croatian origin and are members of Ante Pavelić's brutal Ustaše regime, fleeing Yugoslavia while Tito overran the country. What did Juan Peron do? Acknowledge the ratline and made them his top immigrant priority while being anti-communist. I supported Peron before until i heard he helped the ratline. Another fascist cover up.
Why wouldn't the current Pope, Francis do something to negate the legacy of the ratline? The answer?
He doesn't care because those are just statistics and not important to world history while tryig to radicalize the Vatican. Isn't it a statistic that 700,000-1,400,000 died? Mostly Serbs? For the sake of destroying an Orthodox Church and turning it into a Roman Catholic Church? If those are religiously motivated crime, i will forever renounce the Vatican and it's bloodthirsty ambitions.
So why wasn't this topic not included in history books?
Most countries in the world are lobbied by Americans and you know, Americans care more about war than religion. How about the Roman Catholic countries? No. Because the educated people will leave the church, rendering them dysfunctional and restricted to the uneducated masses. And most people will join the orthodox church, which is an obvious threat to the diplomatic mission of the Vatican.
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